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The California public is demanding solutions: A November 2023 polling by Berkeley IGS showed 84% of California voters are concerned about digital threats to elections, and 73% think state ...
The bill requires developers spending over $100 million to build an AI model to perform safety testing before releasing it. They are required to mitigate the risks if testing finds a model has the ...
California lawmakers passed a hotly contested artificial-intelligence safety bill on Wednesday, after which it will need one more process vote before its fate is in the hands of Governor Gavin ...
On August 28, the bill passed the State Assembly 48-16. Then, due to the amendments, the bill was once again voted on by the Senate, passing 30-9. [37] [38] On September 29, Governor Gavin Newsom vetoed the bill. It is considered unlikely that the legislature will override the governor's veto with a two-thirds vote from both houses. [39]
The bill was introduced by State Senate President Kevin de Leon. [6] The bill passed the Senate on September 16, 2017 27–11 on a party-line vote, with all Democrats voting in favor and all Republicans voting against. The bill passed the Assembly 51–26 on September 15, 2017, with all Republicans and three Democrats voting against. [6]
The bill also clarified language in SB 684 so that variety of different lower-cost homeownership types and builders are eligible to use the bill, including tenancies in common and community land trusts. [5] [6] The bill, also drafted by Caballero, was signed into law by Newsom on September 19, 2024, and will take effect on July 1, 2025. [7] [8]
The amped-up discourse and lobbying over the California bill, which passed the state’s Senate in May 32-1 and heads to a final vote in August, has reached a crescendo over the past few weeks.
In California, candidates for public office could gain access to the general ballot by winning a qualified political party's primary. In 1996, voter-approved Proposition 198 changed California's partisan primary from a closed primary, in which only a political party's members can vote on its nominees, to a blanket primary, in which each voter's ballot lists every candidate regardless of party ...